Teeny-tiny Portland park has an itsy-bitsy theft

By Michael Pearson, CNN

Updated 2:33 AM ET, Sat March 9, 2013

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World's smallest park – The Portland Parks and Recreation department took over care and maintenance of Mill Ends park in 1976. The park was dubbed "World's Smallest Park" by Dick Fagan, a writer for the Oregon Journal who first planted flowers there. This is how the park appeared in 2001.

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World's smallest park – A stolen tree, here returned, lies on the ground next to the one the Parks department planted to replace it at Mill Ends Park in Portland, Oregon, on Friday, March 9. The department says they will replant the returned one in another location if it is still viable.

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World's smallest park – Events at the park have included concerts by the Clan Macleay Pipe Band, picnics, and rose plantings by the Junior Rose Festival Court. Here the park is seen in 2004.

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World's smallest park – The park had to be moved temporarily in 2006 due to construction on Naito Parkway. This photo shows the parks vegetation being moved from its temporary home.

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World's smallest park – The park was reopened on March 16, 2007, in true St. Patrick's Day style with the Royal Rosarians, bagpipers, and members of the Fagan family, including Dick Fagen's wife Katherine, in attendance.

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World's smallest park – Mill Ends Park as it appeared in 2012.

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Story highlights

A tiny Portland, Oregon, park loses its only tree to theft

At just 2 feet across, Mill Ends Park is billed as the world's smallest

A newspaper columnist started the park in an abandoned street light hole in 1948

The city took it over in 1976

The last time Mill Ends Park was in the news, it was full of teeny-tiny plastic police officers, a whole lot of teeny-tiny protest signs, and one scrawny evergreen tree.

That's the kind of place it is, all 452 square inches of it.

What's billed as the world's smallest park, tucked inside a concrete circle just 2 feet across, is a quirky Portland kind of place.

And then, for a short time it seems, someone stole its lone tree. The diminutive evergreen disappeared sometime last week from the downtown street-corner park, KATU reported, citing the Portland Parks and Recreation Department.

It was more of a crisis than you might think: The place is also reputedly the home of leprechaun Patrick O'Toole, whom the late Oregon Journal columnist Dick Fagan claimed granted him a wish of having his own park.

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He frequently wrote about it in the years before his death in 1969, frequently weaving in fanciful tales involving O'Toole and other leprechauns, according to numerous accounts of the celebrated little park.

The city took it over on St. Patrick's Day in 1976, and good-natured park workers have tended to the tiny plot ever since.

So, on discovering the tree was gone, of course they quickly scraped up $3.25 for a new one, hurried downtown and planted the replacement before the notoriously fickle-tempered leprechaun could make any trouble, KATU reported.